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So, why do animals matter? Animals matter because they exist, not
because of what they can do for us, although they surely do a lot. By paying
attention to what we know about their fascinating lives and who (not what)
they are we can and must all work together, in harmony, to make their lives
better.

In 2007 I published a book called Animals Matter and at about the same
time Erin Williams and Margo Demello published a book called Why Animals
Matter. And just this month another book called Why Animals Matter by Marian
Dawkins has been published. I think of it as "Dawkins' Dangerous Idea."

It's often very interesting how communication among colleagues and the
publishing industry works and this brief backstory shows this clearly. To
wit, in early February 2012 I received a review copy of Professor Dawkins'
book from an editor at Oxford University Press asking me to write a
supportive comment for the cover. I was very surprised to receive this
request because I'd actually learned about the book a few weeks before via
an email about another matter in which Dawkins told a colleague, " … Marc
may no longer speak to me when he sees a book that is about to come out!" I
was taken by surprise on both occasions because not only was I unaware of
another book called Why Animals Matter when I saw Dawkins' email but also
that I would be asked to support a book that clearly took me (and many
others) to task.

If Dawkins' criticisms were merely about me I would have let them go but one
doesn't have to read between the lines to see that she is putting forth a
sweeping dismissal or denial of a large body of solid scientific data that
have passed the litmus test of credibility in that they have been published
in the most prestigious peer-reviewed professional journals and books by
renowned scientists, many of whom remain agnostic (at least publicly) about
how their findings can be used for promoting or increasing animal
protection. They don't have any agenda other than do the best scientific
research they can, and often harm other animals in their efforts to learn
more about them.

Despite Dawkins' not so veiled warning, I began reading the uncorrected
galley proofs and immediately learned why Dawkins wrote her ominous note
although I would be more than happy to talk with her. In my brief response
to her new book, I want to be fair. There is a lot of very useful food for
thought in Dawkins' new and challenging book but not much new. However, I
was literally shocked by some of her accusations about my and other
colleague's positions on topics including the best ways to explain animal
behavior, animal emotions, and animal consciousness. I often assess books by
reading about topics with which I'm most familiar, including an author's
rendition of my own work, and I was very surprised to read Dawkins' take on
my position on these and other matters. There's a slippery slope between
reasoned criticism and insult and I frankly feel that Dawkins' criticisms
not only are ungrounded but also demeaning, disrespectful, and insensitive
in her rendition of my and other's views on animal consciousness,
anthropomorphism, and science.

Early in Dawkins' book I learned that " … others, most notably Marc Bekoff,
go in for full-blooded, genuine anthropomorphism." (p. 21) Dawkins goes on
to write that my and other's brand of anthropomorphism "may well be right"
and then, misleadingly claims, "Bekoff is essentially saying that there are
no limits to how we interpret animal behaviour." (p. 22) Nothing can be
further from the truth. While I maintain we should consider all sorts of
data I've also written on many occasions that solid and noninvasive science
are needed as well to assess their reliability.

Dawkins then goes on to cite something I wrote and still stand by, "To live
with a dog is to know first hand that animals have feelings. It's a no
brainer." Dawkins follows, "It began to look as though no further thought or
investigation were going to be necessary. Even worse, this new wave of
anthropomorphism threatened the very scientific basis of the study of animal
behaviour itself, particularly that branch of it known as cognitive
ethology." (p. 26) This is really over-dramatic and plain wrong as many
researchers see the heuristic value of "being anthropomorphic" and then
determining how correct or incorrect these sorts of explanation may be.

I was even more shocked to read this because I have never set up an
"anthropomorphism vs. science" dichotomy and while on occasion I can be
critical of science I also am proud to be a scientist and to do science.
Indeed, in an essay I published in BioScience in 2000 following the
publication of The Smile Of a Dolphin in which numerous distinguished
scientists wrote essays about the emotional and conscious lives of the
animals they studied I'd written about what I called biocentric
anthropomorphism, following up on Gordon Burghardt's notion of critical
anthropomorphism, and how we can use science to access the minds of other
animals. Here is what I wrote:

Biocentric anthropomorphism and anecdote: Expanding science with
care

The way human beings describe and explain the behavior of other animals is
limited by the language they use to talk about things in general. By
engaging in anthropomorphism — using human terms to explain animals’
emotions or feelings—humans make other animals’ worlds accessible to
themselves (Allen and Bekoff 1997, Bekoff and Allen 1997, Crist 1999). But
this is not to say that other animals are happy or sad in the same ways in
which humans (or even other conspecifics) are happy or sad. Of course, I
cannot be absolutely certain that Jethro, my companion dog, is happy, sad,
angry, upset, or in love, but these words serve to explain what he might be
feeling. However, merely referring acontextually to the firing of different
neurons or to the activity of different muscles in the absence of behavioral
information and context is insufficiently informative. Using anthropomorphic
language does not have to discount the animal’s point of view.
Anthropomorphism allows other animals’ behavior and emotions to be
accessible to us. Thus, I maintain that we can be biocentrically
anthropomorphic and do rigorous science." (The above references can be found
here.)

Dawkins also writes, "Rampant anthropomorphism threatens the very basis of
ethology by substituting anecdotes, loose analogies, and an 'I just know
that the animal is thinking so don't bother me with science' attitude to
animal behaviour." (p. 33) I've argued elsewhere that what I call the "A"
words, namely anthropomorphism and anecdote, play a large role in helping us
to understand animal behavior and consciousness but they are not substitutes
for solid science.

So, what's science got to do with it? A lot. Frankly, I find Dawkins'
misrepresentation of my and other's view to be off-putting, serving no
purpose other than to set up sides on the important issues at hand. We may
indeed disagree on some matters but being anthropomorphic and paying
attention to anecdotes is not to be against the need for good science.

Later in her book Dawkins notes, "Animal welfare needs new arguments … it
needs the best scientific evidence available, not wishful thinking or
anthropomorphism." (p. 175) This not so subtle implication that other
researchers and I are anti-science is truly insulting.

Dawkins goes on to discuss different areas of animal consciousness,
remaining skeptical throughout because the scientific evidence is "indirect"
(p. 111) and that "there is no proof either way about animal consciousness
and that it does not serve animals well to claim that there is." (p. 112).
She goes on to write "The mystery of consciousness remains. The explanatory
gap is as wide as ever and all the wanting in the world will not take us
across it." (pp. 171-172)

I firmly disagree with this assertion, and I know I'm not alone. While the
mystery of consciousness, nonhuman and human remains, we have made great
advances in reducing the explanatory gap. There is ample and solid direct
scientific evidence that shows that many other animals are conscious beings
[including, for example, fish (see also) and magpies, my teaser image] and
that we know enough right now to use this information for interpreting and
explaining the behavior of a wide range of species and for developing and
implementing strict guidelines for animal protection. [I just learned about
some very interesting research using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
(fMRI) on dogs.

Charles Darwin's ideas about evolutionary continuity also strongly argue in
favor of other animals being sentient and conscious beings and it's
important to stress that their sentience and consciousness does not have to
just like ours to make them members of the sentience and consciousness club.
Dawkins seems to be taking more of a dualistic approach that in my opinion
is rather weak not only because it questions continuity but also because it
ignores much of what we already know about other animals. Along these lines
it's important to note that the Lisbon Treaty, passed on December 1, 2009,
recognizes animals as sentient beings meaning "they can feel pain and
suffer; learn from experience; make choices; feel joy, fear or misery; and
enjoy the company of others."

Why animals matter

Dawkins claims that to make animal welfare more of interest to the masses we
need to appeal to human self-interests (p. 115) and not rely on
anthropomorphism or flimsy science. There is something to the argument that
we can have animal welfare without consciousness (her chapter 7), but there
is ample evidence that many other animals are conscious and care about what
happens to them and that innumerable people care as well because of what
science tells us about them.

So, do I recommend this book? Well, yes and no. Surely, to be fair to the
people whom she takes to task, it's essential for students and others to
know more about existing data and alternative views that are indeed based on
solid science. When I put Dawkins' combative style aside I can see her
skepticism helping to keep the discussion going for a while, but it
shouldn't be at the expense of my and other's professional reputations
(including renowned scientists Donald Griffin, Michel Cabanac, Jaak
Panksepp, and Joseph LeDoux; however, she is a fan of Temple Grandin) and/or
by offering misleading views on our attitudes toward science, and surely not
by ignoring solid research.

There's really not that much new about which Dawkins hasn't written or
spoken elsewhere, other than a more strident effort to set up false and
misleading divisions and the same old skepticism that surprisingly dismisses
much solid scientific research. She claims " ... it is much, much better for
animals if we remain skeptical and agnostic [about consciousness] ...
Militantly agnostic if necessary, because this keeps alive the possibility
that a large number of species have some sort of conscious experiences ...
For all we know, many animals, not just the clever ones and not just the
overtly emotional ones, also have conscious experiences." (p. 177) I
disagree and frankly don't see how anyone who works closely with any of a
wide array of animals could remain skeptical and agnostic about whether they
are conscious. I really don't know anyone who does. They say repetition is
boring conversation but many others and I see a wealth of scientific data
that makes skepticism, and surely agnosticism, to be anti-science and
harmful to animals.

As time goes on and more data are amassed Dawkins seems to be upping the
ante in that there never seems to be enough data for her on topics such as
animal emotions and animal consciousness. As I wrote above, while the
mystery of consciousness may remain and the knowledge about the nitty-gritty
details of consciousness may still (and perhaps always) remain elusive, we
know enough now to use it in interpretations and explanations of animal
behavior and in arguments for animal protection.

Dawkins worries that bad science will drive people away from being concerned
with animal welfare but I maintain that if we remain so skeptical of what we
already know it undermines our efforts to learn about who other animals are
and to protect them. Dawkins' sweeping claim that " … what has become the
new orthodoxy about animal welfare - that anthropomorphism is all we need …"
truly misrepresents the views of numerous people around the world,
researchers and non-researchers alike, who are keenly interested in making
the lives of other animals far better than they are.

I am not a science-basher nor do I ridicule scientists for "pointing out how
hard it is to study consciousness" (p. 184) and I believe Professor Dawkins
has done a disservice to the many researchers with whom she takes issue and
whose hard work she easily discounts in pushing, once again, her skepticism
de jour. One of my colleagues who read this piece thought I was being "too
nice and forgiving" given Dawkins' rather harsh words about what she takes
to be my views on the matters at hand. My colleague felt there was something
"disturbingly unprofessional" about Dawkins' strident and dismissive prose.
Be that as it may, I don't feel the need to push my agenda by putting others
down. On the one hand Dawkins could also be taken to be anti-science, or
more specifically "anti the science with which she disagrees", as much of
the research she questions (or ignores) has been published in highly
prestigious peer-reviewed professional journals and books. On the other hand
I thank her for making me think about the issues at hand and for helping me
come to a firmer basis for rejecting much of what she writes.

While Dawkins feels that loose science and anthropomorphism will harm
efforts to protect animals I argue that her skepticism - nay-saying, doubt,
and denial that fly in the face of available data - and failure to heed what
we know is more harmful. Additional research that is noninvasive such as
that done recently on empathy in rats is what is sorely needed. Much
research can be enriching to the animals who are studied and does not have
to be nor should it be harmful. We also need to factor in what we know about
free-ranging animals who are able to perform the full array of
species-typical behavior patterns. Although we can always welcome more data,
we know enough now about a wide array of animals to use this information to
work hard to protect them.

So, why do animals matter? Animals matter because they exist, not because of
what they can do for us, although they surely do a lot. By paying attention
to what we know about their fascinating lives and who (not what) they are we
can and must all work together, in harmony, to make their lives better. As I
travel all over the world I see that we are making much progress because so
many people really do care about the well-being of other animals. We can
rewild our hearts by respecting who other animals are and by working on
their behalf. And we can rest assured that solid science firmly supports our
efforts to offer more protection to the billions of animals who are abused
in myriad ways.

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